Lost Sci-Fi Books 226 thru 230 : Five Classic Journeys Through Wonder, Fear, and Imagination

Lost Sci-Fi Books 226 thru 230 gathers an extraordinary range of vintage science-fiction—from cosmic dread to patriotic devotion, sly humor to tragic heroism.

In Conquest Over Time by Michael Shaara, Contact Man Pat Travis lands on the astrologer-ruled world of Mert during an eclipse that marks him as an omen of disaster. Trapped among the “unfortunates” condemned by their birth-charts, he must turn superstition into strategy before rival companies steal the contract he needs.

The Nameless City by H. P. Lovecraft pulls an explorer into a forgotten desert ruin older than humanity. Beneath the sands lies a presence waiting centuries in the dark. Some truths sleep lightly… and some awaken hungry.

Two Weeks in August by Frank M. Robinson begins as a harmless boast: Bill, too broke for vacation, claims he’s spending two weeks on Mars. But when office braggart McCleary returns with tickets, photos, souvenirs, and pink Martian sand, fantasy and reality collide in this clever Twilight-Zone-style tale.

In I Bring Fresh Flowers by Robert F. Young, Rosemary Brooks—patriot, idealist, astronette—becomes the first woman to orbit Earth. When tragedy strikes during re-entry, the world mourns… then watches the seasons themselves change. Rain softens, flowers bloom, sunlight turns golden. Rosemary becomes part of the earth, the sky, every dawn.

Savage Galahad by Bryce Walton tells of a massive Venusian swamp-lord who senses the terrified thoughts of a lost human woman. Awakened to beauty for the first time, he protects her from the horrors of his world—until a final battle with the monstrous Torrg seals their destinies.

Five worlds. Five destinies. One essential volume of classic sci-fi brilliance.

À propos de ce livre

Lost Sci-Fi Books 226 thru 230 gathers an extraordinary range of vintage science-fiction—from cosmic dread to patriotic devotion, sly humor to tragic heroism.

In Conquest Over Time by Michael Shaara, Contact Man Pat Travis lands on the astrologer-ruled world of Mert during an eclipse that marks him as an omen of disaster. Trapped among the “unfortunates” condemned by their birth-charts, he must turn superstition into strategy before rival companies steal the contract he needs.

The Nameless City by H. P. Lovecraft pulls an explorer into a forgotten desert ruin older than humanity. Beneath the sands lies a presence waiting centuries in the dark. Some truths sleep lightly… and some awaken hungry.

Two Weeks in August by Frank M. Robinson begins as a harmless boast: Bill, too broke for vacation, claims he’s spending two weeks on Mars. But when office braggart McCleary returns with tickets, photos, souvenirs, and pink Martian sand, fantasy and reality collide in this clever Twilight-Zone-style tale.

In I Bring Fresh Flowers by Robert F. Young, Rosemary Brooks—patriot, idealist, astronette—becomes the first woman to orbit Earth. When tragedy strikes during re-entry, the world mourns… then watches the seasons themselves change. Rain softens, flowers bloom, sunlight turns golden. Rosemary becomes part of the earth, the sky, every dawn.

Savage Galahad by Bryce Walton tells of a massive Venusian swamp-lord who senses the terrified thoughts of a lost human woman. Awakened to beauty for the first time, he protects her from the horrors of his world—until a final battle with the monstrous Torrg seals their destinies.

Five worlds. Five destinies. One essential volume of classic sci-fi brilliance.

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  1. Lost Sci-Fi Books 446 thru 450 : Strange Planets, Dangerous Missions and Unlikely Heroes

    A. Bertram Chandler, Hal Clement, Nelson S. Bond, Frank M. Robinson, Arthur Jean Cox

  2. Lost Sci-Fi Books 476 thru 480 : Bizarre Discoveries and Impossible Messages from Beyond

    Nelson S. Bond, Frank Belknap Long, James Bell, H. F. Arnold, Gene L. Henderson

  3. Lost Sci-Fi Books 326 thru 330 : Spacefront Disasters, Alien Worlds and Impossible Odds

    Arthur C. Clarke, Robert Abernathy, Herbert D. Kastle, Fritz Leiber, George O. Smith

  4. Lost Sci-Fi Books 511 thru 515 : Forgotten Encounters from the Early Days of Science Fiction

    Hal K. Wells, Robert Sheckley, Frank Belknap Long, Edward Page Mitchell

  5. Lost Sci-Fi Books 356 thru 360 : Five Unsettling Encounters from the Outer Edges of Classic Science Fiction

    Robert Silverberg, E. M. Hull, Mel Hunter, Gerda Rhoads, Don Mark Lemon

  6. Lost Sci-Fi Books 311 thru 315 : Five Dangerous Encounters from the Golden Age of Science Fiction

    Arthur C. Clarke, Alan E. Nourse, Robert Silverberg, Miriam Allen deFord, Donald A. Wollheim

  7. Lost Sci-Fi Books 361 thru 365 : Strange Signals, Impossible Loops and Discoveries Best Left Buried

    Don Mark Lemon, H.P. Lovecraft, Alan E. Nourse, Ron Cocking, Thorp McClusky

  8. Lost Sci-Fi Books 371 thru 375 : Five Classic Tales of Strange Worlds and Dark Consequences

    Nelson S. Bond, Mack Reynolds, Katherine MacLean, Edgar Allan Poe, Lester del Rey

  9. Lost Sci-Fi Books 366 thru 370 : Five Dark Classics of Suspense, Terror and the Strange

    Harlan Ellison, Jack London, Frank Belknap Long, Edgar Allan Poe, Frank R. Stockton

  10. Lost Sci-Fi Books 286 thru 290 - Five Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s : Reality, Rockets, and the Dark Wonders of the Universe

    Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, Donald A. Wollheim, Robert E. Howard, Frederik Pohl

  11. Lost Sci-Fi Books 471 thru 475 : Five Classic Adventures of Machines, Monsters, and Men from the Golden Age of Science Fiction

    Harry Harrison, Robert Silverberg, Murray Leinster, Jack Vance, Alfred Coppel

  12. Lost Sci-Fi Books 276 thru 280 - Five Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s : Classic Adventures Across Space, Time, and the Human Heart

    Robert Silverberg, Tom Godwin, Robert Sheckley, Ray Cummings, Donald A. Wollheim